6 Steps to Creating a Killer Offer

There are tons of offers to promote, but few will ever have the power and uniqueness needed to put a lot of money in your pocket. Creating your own killer offer is the way countless people have managed to build lists, generate revenue, and grow their business. It may seem like a daunting task at first. It was a big step for me too but I’ve created a number of successful offers myself.

This is how I do it:

Know the Target Market

Your target market is the first thing you need to consider. A killer offer is designed to appeal directly to a specific group of people. You’ll need to offer something useful—something they’ll want to use or learn from. The key to a successful offer is simply creating something your target market is hungry for.

You can discover what this is by doing a bit of research. Try to find a relevant message board and look at the questions being asked. Investigate offers from other people, keeping an eye on what they’re offering and the way their offer is presented. This research phase will often give you all the answers you need.

What’s in it for them?

The main selling points of your offer will be the benefits. You’ll need to determine what someone will get out of it. Maybe it’s a program that makes their life easier. It could be an educational course that answers a number of questions they have. Perhaps it’s simply a new technique or product which will improve what your potential customers are already doing. Before you can create a killer offer, you need to understand what you’ll be offering.

Features

Once you’ve figured out the benefits, you need to come up with the features. These are the nuts and bolts of what they get when they purchase. No matter what you do, there is probably some competition. An impressive set of features (which show HOW a buyer will realize the benefits) will make your offer appear much more valuable. Add features wherever you can to support the benefits.

Build value before price

Far too many people chose a price and try to create an offer around that. The price of a product or service is relative to what it’s worth to the buyer. If something is of an extremely high quality, offers a long list of benefits, and has more features than other options, then even a high price will seem low.

The more value you can build the better. Keep adding to the offer. Show them what they can earn, save, or the dollar values of the offer’s components. As the value goes up, the relative size of the price will go down.

Guarantees

People are often reluctant to spend money. They want to be sure they’re getting a good deal, and avoid the risk of loss. This is why you need to add a guarantee. This could be as simple as a guarantee to refund anyone who isn’t satisfied or as complicated as a warranty with maintenance. Or, offer a free trial and let them use your product or service for a short period of time. This guarantee is often what pushes people over the line and into the realm of paying customers.

Call to action

The call to action is the last and possibly most important thing to include in an offer. At the end of the sales copy, you need to clearly and boldly tell your potential customers what to do. If you want them to buy something, contact you, or submit their email, you need to tell them exactly how to do it, and do it NOW. The call to action is the culmination of everything your sales copy has been building.

With practice you can learn how to create your own killer offers. It does, however, take a lot of time and effort to write, test, and revise until it sells well. If you’d rather jump right into promoting killer products and making good money, you absolutely need to see my Done-For-You system for generating leads and selling the high-converting offers I have perfected over time. Click here now and start raking it in today.

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I start blogging in 2008 but I have never take blogging seriously. And that is the biggest mistakes that I make in my life. In 2010 I almost stop blogging completely. I concentrate on my low paying day job and was too tired to even look at my blog. But then I still keep my blog and websites up. After 7 years, I realize that I cannot only depends on my day job. I could not afford being in the rat race 9 to 5 work and also on unpaid on-call work. Then I realize something, if I never stop blogging in 2010, I will have lots of audience by now. It takes few years for me to realize this mistakes. And now here I am again, creating a good content for you. I hope you can subscribe to my mailing list and also like my Facebook page. Also, if you found that my content is good, please share it with your friend. Thanks. - Papa Shally